Web Development

According to Wikipedia[^] the Indian Copyright Law automatically grants you the copyright for intellectual works that you're the author of. And it doesn't say anything about the need to register or even pay for it (it's the same here in Germany). I guess the website you have found there charging for "issuing copyrights" is a scam.

I have inherited a website and need to make some changes. It would be nice to know before i start, what files are used/called within each page on the website.
Apart from Google sitemap (which I cant get to work at home, so don't want to try at work), is there a way to get these results.

On the assumption that you are in a situation where no external tools will be available (for whatever reason) and there is nothing built in to the development tool you are using (or it is broke and wont be fixed) you only really have two choices: 1. Open every file and look for all the links 2. Do what I did and create a web app that will open all the files for you and search them for what you're looking for.

Any urgent help on this would be highly appreciated. am about to start working on a project which involves retrieving data from a remote API. its gonna be a web-project whereby a user already registered on a desktop application would be able to view their basic and other information on a website.

i understand i need to make API calls to be able to make the information saved on the desktop database available for the user on the web. but i dont how to start.

The database for your website will not be saved on the desktop, instead it will be present on the server of your hosting provider (or if you're hosting it yourself, then on your own hosting system). Secondly, API calls, and the simple website has a difference. API calls are used, when you allow third-party applications to use your own framework and let them use the data of the user. Since it is your own application why do you need to create an API?

If you're going to create a desktop application for your website, then yes, you will need an API because now your desktop application would be as a third-party client accessing the data.

The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~

I am trying to use OUT parameter with PDO and PHP to return an email address from my stored pocedure but getting this error:

Fatal error: Uncaught exception 'PDOException' with message 'SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1414 OUT or INOUT argument 13 for routine hrms.sp_web_add_new_employee_leave is not a variable or NEW pseudo-variable in BEFORE trigger' in /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/submit_leave.php:37 Stack trace: #0 /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/submit_leave.php(37): PDOStatement->execute() #1 {main} thrown in /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/submit_leave.php on line 37

What if my take over the world project involve people partaking of their money for my benefit?!
I'd like to provide payment options on my website (no evil paypal please) and I have no idea how!
Any tip about which payment broker I could use please?

PayPal would be a good choice (Google Wallet can also be taken into considerations), but since you're having "take over the world", there won't be anything left and thus you would have to write your own.

The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~

That would consume the WebClient by you, or you would need to include a WebBrowser control. Which also would make the HTTP requests to your desired web page (which is the Google Wallet API web page). You know this is a cycle that starts and ends at the very same point, the System.Net namespace.

I would go with programming my own control and getting the response from the server using either a WebClient, or by downloading the response stream.

The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~

I am getting the following error after uploading the file to the host:

Warning: session_start(): Cannot send session cookie - headers already sent by (output started at /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/login_user.php:1) in /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/includes/php_header.php on line 3
Warning: session_start(): Cannot send session cache limiter - headers already sent (output started at /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/login_user.php:1) in /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/includes/php_header.php on line 3
Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/login_user.php:1) in /home/jassimuser/mybluefile.com/login_user.php on line 52

An SSL certificate will usually have the "key usage" restricted to "server authentication" (and possibly "client authentication"). That means you can't use it for code-signing, email protection, time-stamping or OCSP signing.

In theory a SSL certificate can be used to digitally sign files/code, however it depends on the properties of that SSL certificate...
The SSL have to have keyUsage.digitalSignature flag to set to use it for file signing, and extendedKeyUsage.codeSigning for code signing...
As you bought the SSL for web site (probably via your host) you will not have these flags set...
You may ask to extend the certificate or get a new one for file/code signing...